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10. A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe. A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe. Stages of Postclassical Development Western Culture in the Postclassical Era Changing Economic and Social Forms in the Postclassical Centuries The Decline of the Medieval Synthesis.
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10 A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe
A New Civilization Emerges inWestern Europe • Stages of Postclassical Development • Western Culture in the Postclassical Era • Changing Economic and Social Forms in the Postclassical Centuries • The Decline of the Medieval Synthesis
Stages of Postclassical Development • 6th to 10th centuries • Fragmentation prevails • Catholic church strong • Iberia • Arab Muslims • Core: France, Low Countries, Germany • Later, England
Stages of Postclassical Development • Scandinavian Vikings • Raids from 8th to 10th centuries • Literacy declines • except among churchmen
The Manorial System: Obligations and Allegiances • Local, personal political organization • Manorialism • Agricultural economy • Reciprocal obligations • In-kind labor for produce • Serfdom
The Manorial System: Obligations and Allegiances • 800s • Agricultural innovation • Moldboard • Crop rotation
The Church: Political and Spiritual Power • Popes follow Roman organization • Appoint bishops • Sponsor missionaries
The Church: Political and Spiritual Power • Monasticism • Benedict of Nursia • Benedictine rule • Spiritual functions • Holiness • Network • Pilgrimage centers
The Church: Political and Spiritual Power • Monasticism • Secular functions • Education • Large estates • Shelter travelers • Universities, from 13th century
Charlemagne and His Successors • Frankish Carolingian dynasty • Charles Martel • 732, Tours • Charles the Great (Charlemagne) • 800, crowned emperor • Copied Roman central administration • 814, death • Empire fragments • 843, Treaty of Verdun • Three kingdoms
Charlemagne and His Successors • Holy Roman emperors • Ruling Germany, Italy
Western Europe Toward the End of the Middle Ages, c. 1360 C.E.
New Economic and Urban Vigor • Agricultural improvements • Increased production • Surplus, wealth, population growth • Towns grow • Literacy expands • Education • Cathedral schools, from 11th century • Universities, from 13th century
Feudal Monarchies and Political Advances • Personal relationship • Military service for land • Some lords emerge more powerful • e.g. Capetian kings of France • Develop bureaucracies, states
Feudal Monarchies and Political Advances • William the Conqueror • 1066, Norman conquest of England • Centralized government • Sheriffs, courts
Limited Government • Political fragmentation continues • Monarchs limited by church, nobles, towns • 1215, Magna Carta • King John recognizes supremacy of written law
Limited Government • Representative bodies • Catalonia, from 1000 • England, from 1265 • Monarchs continue to increase in power • Large conflicts • e.g. Hundred Years War
The West's Expansionist Impulse • Germanic knights • From 11th century, into eastern Germany, Poland • Iberia • Northern Christian states begin reconquista • Vikings • Cross Atlantic
The West's Expansionist Impulse • Crusades • Called by Urban II, 1095 • Initial success • New contact with Islam
Religious Reform and Evolution • Gregorian reform, 11th century • Based in monasteries • Gregory VII • Separation of secular and religious spheres • Mendicants, 13th century • St. France, St. Clare, St. Dominic
Western Culture in the Postclassical Era • Theology: Assimilating Faith and Reason • Exploration of Greek philosophy • Peter Abelard, 12th century • Rational examination of doctrine • Bernard of Clairvaux • Opposed to Abelard's approach • Mysticism • Debate in universities
Western Culture in the Postclassical Era • Theology: Assimilating Faith and Reason • Thomas Aquinas • Summas • Faith primary, reason leads to understanding • Scholasticism • Roger Bacon
Religious Themes in Art and Literature • Romanesque architecture • Especially monastic buildings • Gothic • From 11th century
Religious Themes in Art and Literature • 12th century • Vernacular, secular literature • e.g. Song of Roland • Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales • Troubadours
Changing Economic and Social Forms in the Postclassical Centuries • New Strains in Rural Life • Peasants v. landlords • Peasants slowly gain
Growth of Trade and Banking • Commerce expands • Mediterranean zone joined with North Sea, Baltic • Money replaces barter • Banking, insurance merge • Hanseatic Leage • Northern Germany, southern Scandinavia
Growth of Trade and Banking • Merchants relatively free • But relatively low status • Guilds • Craft associations • Protect markets • Ensure standards • Social role
Limited Sphere for Women • Women generally lose ground • Some opportunities as nuns
The Decline of the Medieval Synthesis • Widespread warfare from 1300 to 1500 • Hundred Years War • Weakens feudal order • Population outstrips agriculture • Famines • Bubonic Plague (Black Death) • from 1348
Signs of Strain • Aristocracy lose military purpose • Foot soldiers more important • Increasingly decorative • Church increasingly rigid
The Postclassical West and Its Heritage • Formative period • Dynamic change
Global Connections:Medieval Europe and the World • Ambivalent attitudes towards surrounding peoples • Repeated invasions formative • Islam recognized for its superiority in many areas • Learning, copying from Arabic world • Change in transcontinental connections • Volume of trade increases